Tiedemann v. the Signe

37 F. Supp. 819, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3581
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedApril 4, 1941
Docket489
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 37 F. Supp. 819 (Tiedemann v. the Signe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tiedemann v. the Signe, 37 F. Supp. 819, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3581 (E.D. La. 1941).

Opinion

CAILLOUET, District Judge.

Proctors of record for the libelant herein, filed their motion suggesting to the court that they desire to procure the testimony of Oskar Tiedemann, the libelant, who is represented as residing at Vabaduse Valjak 10, Tallinn, Estonia.

It is made to appear by said motion that such testimony can not be secured, save and except by and through means of letters rogatory from this court, requesting the Supreme Court of the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, at Moscow, to assist this court in obtaining said testimony; and the appropriate order for such letters rogatory, from this court,- addressed to said Supreme Court, “or such Court or Courts of competent jurisdiction exercising jurisdiction in the City of Moscow, U.S.S.R.”, is accordingly applied for.

Strenuous opposition to the granting of said 'order is made by the proctors for respondent and claimant, and whilst the court’s first natural inclination was to grant the application for letters rogatory since, as it is represented by the movers, the testimony of the libelant may not otherwise be secured, and he should, under normal conditions, be granted the opportunity to present to the court such legal evidence as( he deems proper to establish the claimed rights of himself and his alleged principals in and to the S. S. Florida, her engines, tackle, apparel, furniture, appurtenances and equipment, a further and more comprehensive examination into the subject matter, however, has forced the court to the definite conclusion that there would be no justification for the granting of the application for such letters rogatory, in view of existent circumstances, over which, it may nevertheless be true, the libelant has, unfortunately, no control.

Such libelant is represented by the movers to be a resident of Estonia, and Estonia is that autonomous country of which the absorption by and into the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was sought to be effected by said Union during the year 1940, although the United States of America has never recognized such attempted absorption, and regards as still in force the Treaty of Friendship, Commerce and Consular Rights between said Estonia and themselves, which was signed on December 23, 1925; and said United States of America, as late as December 19, 1940, and unto this very day (the court has no reason to doubt), continues to recognize an Acting Counsel General of Estonia, at New York, as vested with authority to act as such.

Letters rogatory are the medium, in effect, whereby one country, speaking through one of its courts, requests another country, acting through its own courts and by methods of court procedure peculiar thereto and entirely within the latter’s control, to assist the administration of justice in the former country; such request being made, and being usually granted, by reason of the comity existing between nations in ordinary peaceful times.

The country so requesting this aid for and on behalf of the orderly administration and dispensing of justice in its courts, first conveys, in its letters rogatory, the official greetings of its governing head to the court, or courts, in the foreign country wherein resides a witness whose testimony it is sought to take by means of the good offices of said court, or courts, and the sustaining authority of the laws therein administered concerning the taking of evidence under letters rogatory. 24 Words and Phrases, Permanent Edition, “Letters Rogatory”, pp. 704, 705; Black’s Law Dictionary, 3d Edition, p. 1092.

For usual form of letters rogatory, see Benedict on Admiralty, 6th Edition-Knauth, § 400, p. 99; and form used in this court.

*821 “By the law of nations”, reads Benedict on Admiralty, § 400, p. 92, “the courts of justice of different countries are bound mutually to aid and assist each other for the furtherance of justice.” To secure such aid and assistance, letters rogatory are resorted to (the author continues), and the request to take the desired testimony which is thereby made of the court, or courts, in the foreign country is justified by the offer to do the like, should request therefor ever be made in a similar case, by such foreign court, under authority of the national laws which govern it.

In this case, here at issue, the form of letters rogatory submitted by the applicants therefor is made the medium of conveying the official greetings of His Excellency, the President of the United States, to the Supreme Court, Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic, Moscow, U.S. S.R, and of the giving of assurance to said court that “we shall be pleased to do the same for you in a similar case, when required”.

This District Court of the United States of America, whose power and authority to function as such within the Eastern District of Louisiana is derived from the Constitution and the Acts of Congress, should not exercise that authority (as for instance in the issuance of letters rogatory now being applied for) in such a manner as to belittle, in the eyes of a foreign court, the very source of the authority which, alone, under normal conditions, would justify this court in seeking the good offices of said foreign court, in the name of said United States of America, to the end that justice may be done in this American court.

This nation does not recognize that the Supreme Court of the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, at Moscow, is justly vested with legal jurisdiction over any part of Estonia, but, on the contrary, officially deprecates and condemns the action of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics in attempting to absorb into the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republics the hitherto autonomous nation of Estonia.

The letters rogatory applied for and submitted for issuance by this court, however, specifically assert that the libelant is within the jurisdiction of said Supreme Court of the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic, Moscow, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, and for that reason, request is Inade of said court by this American court that, “in the furtherance of justice” and “by proper and usual process” of said Supreme Court, the libelant, “who resides at Vabaduse Valjak 10, Tallinn, Estonia,” be caused to appear before said Supreme Court, etc.

This court should not, and will not, under the existent circumstances detailed hereinabove, issue any such letters rogatory.

It is true that the motion of counsel for such letters rogatory alleges that the libelant, who is therein represented to be a resident of Estonia, “upon being summoned or notified by said Court (meaning the Supreme Court, to whom it is desired to have the letters rogatory addressed) will voluntarily appear at said tribunal to answer the interrogatories”, but neither the United States of America nor this court recognizes any legal authority in said Supreme Court, Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Moscow, to summon before it a resident of Estonia, at the instance of this American court and by way of assisting it in the doing of justice. How, then, can official request for such summons be made?

The libelant, it must be remembered, carries the burden of making out his case, and the evidence that he would submit, in any event, would be subject to the scrutiny of this court.

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Bluebook (online)
37 F. Supp. 819, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tiedemann-v-the-signe-laed-1941.